By Jared Misner Carol Browner (JD 79) is sitting at a window seat in the Gainesville Hilton’s lobby with a pair of oversized sunglasses and a constantly buzzing iPhone nestled on the table in front of her. She offers a

Considering the obstacles, you might call it a modern miracle. In the face of dwindling state support and tough times for higher education, the Levin College of Law has rallied its alumni and friends during thepast decade in a $30

Stephen N. Zack (JD 71) was honored Sept. 12 during the naming ceremony of UF Law’s Stephen N. Zack Hall. “There is nothing that I have achieved in my professional life that would have been possible without this university and

“You don’t just go to war, you prepare for it first,” said UF Law’s new assistant dean of the Center for Career Development. “The job search is the same. There is a lot of preparation and research before you start

Trial Team, Moot Court make impressive showings During its 2010-2011 competitions, members of the Florida Moot Court team won three regional championships, including the regional title at the ABA National Appellate Advocacy Competition, a Best Brief award at the Thomas

MICHELLE ADORNO Assistant Dean for Admissions Michelle Adorno joined the Levin College of Law as assistant dean for admissions last summer. She comes to the college from New York University School of Law, where she served as director of admissions

Lauren Fasig assistant in law and director of research for the center on children and families As parents , teachers and coaches have long known, teens think differently than adults. So, it comes as no surprise that a substantial and growing

Historic real property treatise transformed into desk reference By Scott Emerson In 1949, Richard Powell, a Columbia law professor and expert on real property law, published the first volume of his treatise, Powell on Real Property. Sixty years and 17

Gators for higher education legislative advocacy program By Lindy Mccollum-Brounley Though economic times typically call for belt-tightening, but the fiduciary fall-out of Florida’s $2.6 billion budgetary shortfall last year felt less like belt tightening and more like garroting — especially for